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             Christoph Willibald GLUCK (1714-1787) 
               
              Orfeo ed Euridice - Opera in Three Acts (1762)  
                
              Orfeo - Anita Rachvelishvili (alto); Euridice - Maite Alberola (soprano); 
              Amore - Auxiliadora Toledano (soprano)  
              Palau de la Musica Catalana Chamber Choir  
              Orquesta bandArt/Gordan Nikolic (violin)  
              Staged by La Fura dels Baus.  
              Director: Carlus Padrissa  
              Costume designer: Aitziber Sanz. Lighting designer: Carles Rigual 
               
              rec. live, Castell de Peralada Festival, 2011  
              Format: NTSC; Picture 16:9, HD. Sound DVD: DTS 5.1, PCM Stereo  
              Booklet: English, German, French  
              Subtitles: Italian (original language), English, German, French, 
              Spanish, Chinese, Korean  
                
              UNITEL/CLASSICA C MAJOR   
              710308 [110:00]   
             
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                  Most great composers reach a stage in their creative output 
                  when they recognise that what they had created was a mere staging-post 
                  in their possibilities and aspire to move the genre forward. 
                  Think Beethoven and his Third Symphony or Rossini as he approached 
                  William Tell and then laid down his operatic pen. Verdi, 
                  in his long compositional life was to experience two such periods. 
                  The first came between the third act of Luisa Miller, 
                  along with Stiffelio, and the subsequent Rigoletto 
                  when he took giant leaps in dramatic musical complexity and 
                  character delineation in his operas. The second came with his 
                  penultimate work, Otello, with its move away from the 
                  set-pieces of the preceding Aida into a more seamless 
                  style with the music moving the drama forward in a stream of 
                  dramatic creativity uninterrupted by the norm of style in which 
                  he had previously written.  
                     
                  The situation with Gluck was not much different than that with 
                  his illustrious successors. He had become frustrated by the 
                  static nature of the genre as is well illustrated in the treatment 
                  of the Orfeo theme, one of the most durable of operatic 
                  themes. It is the basis of Monteverdi’s work of that name 
                  which many consider the very first opera worthy of staging. 
                  Gluck’s version came over 150 years later. In the meantime 
                  the genre of opera had grown massively and evolved its own rather 
                  static conventions.   
                  With his version of Orfeo, and in subsequent works, Gluck 
                  consciously sought to break away from those static conventions 
                  of recitative and aria, which focused attention on the singers 
                  at the expense of the music and drama of the piece. These works 
                  became his so-called reform operas. Working closely with his 
                  librettist Calzabigi (1714-1795) Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice 
                  was created with carefully constructed scenes. It introduced 
                  dances and chorus to give ‘the language of the heart, 
                  strong passions, interesting situations and constantly varied 
                  spectacle’. This instead of the static ‘flowery 
                  descriptions, superfluous comparisons and sententious, cold 
                  moralising’ of what had gone before. In my view these 
                  objectives were magnificently realised in this wonderfully melodic 
                  and dramatically taut work. Its structure is such as to have 
                  drawn Berlioz and Wagner to make revised editions.  
                     
                  So far so simple. Gluck, however, cast a contralto castrati 
                  as his Orfeo for the first production in Vienna on the 5 October 
                  1762. But the age of the castrati, the great primas of Handel’s 
                  operas, was drawing to a close. They had not been acceptable 
                  in France where a form of high tenor had evolved. For the work’s 
                  premiere in Paris in 1774 Gluck re-wrote the role of Orfeo for 
                  this high tenor voice. He also, like Verdi and Wagner later, 
                  had to provide additional ballet music for the Paris performance. 
                  Other performances and recordings, particularly in the past 
                  fifteen years or so, have reverted to period instruments. These 
                  have also involved the singing of the role of Orfeo by a counter-tenor 
                  or falsettist with no use of vibrato by soloists or orchestra. 
                  The problem with most counter-tenors is that whilst they are 
                  strong at the top of the voice they often lack strength lower 
                  down their range. The contralto castrato at the premiere had 
                  a range of three octaves. Some female contralto singers such 
                  as Ewa Podles, the Orfeo on the Arts CD, have a similar range 
                  up to a brilliant top C. Such singers are few and far between. 
                  Anita Rachvelishvili in this performance, whilst having rich 
                  timbres in her lower voice is not yet of their number.  
                     
                  However, that is to jump ahead somewhat. The first matter is 
                  to address the raison d’être for this performance 
                  which influences the basis of its unique, even idiosyncratic, 
                  character. The performance and staging is by the theatre collective 
                  La Fura dels Baus under the direction of Carlus Padrissa 
                  and was presented at the 25th Peralada Festival, Spain, 2011. 
                  The costumes are modern and accompanied by a very basic set 
                  dominated by a large vertical slab. The scenic effects are dominated 
                  by a constantly changing series of projections, so many as sometimes 
                  to disturb concentration on the music and singing and often 
                  barely relevant to the story, or at least so to my eyes. A further 
                  idiosyncrasy is the presence of at least some of the orchestra 
                  on the stage, often moving about and becoming involved in the 
                  action of the story and whilst playing their instruments. They 
                  are costumed in what looks like body stockings with black vertical 
                  stripes running their length. The stage musicians are at first 
                  dominated by the strings and for a few moments I thought them 
                  a period band. The strange and fractured acoustic seemed to 
                  betray other facts and greater numbers.  
                     
                  Orfeo is dressed in what appears to be a low cut blue trouser 
                  suit; so low-cut as to reveal two ample denials of masculinity. 
                  Add a long flowing hairstyle more suitable to Carmen 
                  and gender confusion could take over. Euridice is dressed in 
                  a magnificent white low-cut ball gown with a décolleté 
                  that would win, erm, hands down, in any Double D cup competition 
                  around! Amor, often appearing and singing whilst suspended and 
                  accompanied by a dancer is costumed and coutured in dominant 
                  gold. Poor Orfeo has to climb the central pillar even as it 
                  extends, albeit that she has a clearly visible harness in support 
                  and which comes in handy when she later abseils down. Harnesses 
                  abound with all three singers in the final trio (CH.43) swinging 
                  about in cradles.  
                     
                  None of the solo singing is inadequate and often better than 
                  that. It is not, however, in the style generally associated 
                  with Gluck, pre- or post- reform! In a period of operatic performance 
                  where minimalist staging is the name of the game, this is the 
                  other end of the spectrum. Excessive visual distraction and 
                  unidiomatic musical accompaniment leave it in a musical fashion 
                  world of its own that may appeal to some non-Gluckian opera 
                  lovers. The advertising blurb notes that this is the first Orfeo 
                  ed Euridice to appear on Blu-ray. Alternative visual performances 
                  of this great work are strictly limited. Despite its over-luxurious 
                  orchestration, stick with that under Raymond Leppard and Janet 
                  Baker or wait until some enterprising company gets Ewa Podles 
                  and a period band together under a conductor immersed in the 
                  idiom.  
                     
                  Robert J Farr  
                     
                  see also review (of Blu-ray version) by Kirk 
                  McElhearn 
                 
             
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